Key facts
- US energy firms are developing hybrid power facilities combining nuclear and natural gas to meet AI data center demand.
- Blue Energy and GE Vernova are planning a 2.5 GW facility in Texas using a small modular nuclear reactor and natural gas.
- The natural gas portion is expected to be operational by 2030, with nuclear power following by 2032.
- This approach aims to leverage nuclear's baseline power with natural gas's flexibility and quicker deployment.
- Other tech companies, like Google, are also exploring hybrid energy solutions for data centers.
The escalating energy demands of artificial intelligence data centers are prompting innovative, albeit unconventional, energy solutions. In response to the unprecedented strain on electric grids, US energy firms are increasingly exploring hybridized power models that combine the carbon-free, round-the-clock reliability of nuclear energy with the affordability and rapid deployment of natural gas.
This approach seeks to address the high costs and lengthy regulatory timelines associated with new nuclear power construction, while mitigating the significant greenhouse gas emissions linked to natural gas. The strategy views these two energy sources as complementary, ensuring energy security for the burgeoning AI sector.
A notable example is the proposed 2.5 GW hybrid facility in Texas by Blue Energy, in partnership with GE Vernova. This project plans to integrate GE Vernova Hitachi Nuclear Energy's BWRX-300 small modular reactor with a natural gas component. The facility will operate both energy sources separately but complementarily, allowing for the natural gas operation to commence while the nuclear construction navigates regulatory hurdles. Construction of the natural gas components is set to begin this year, with nuclear permits to be submitted in 2027. Energy production from natural gas is anticipated by 2030, and from nuclear power by 2032, to power a nearby data center campus.
Eric Gray, CEO of GE Vernova’s Power Segment, highlighted the collaboration's aim to meet AI expansion demands while decreasing time to power. This initiative is not isolated; Google has also partnered with Crusoe Energy in North Texas to develop a data center campus featuring a wind farm and a substantial natural gas facility.
However, this hybrid approach raises concerns about an over-reliance on fossil fuels amidst urgent decarbonization goals. These new facilities represent a larger conflict between energy security and sustainability, as Big Tech invests in clean energy while simultaneously driving a natural gas boom to offset AI's massive energy and carbon footprint.
